Years active 1977– Spouse Nina Flournoy Role Professor | Name Craig Flournoy Children Three daughters | |
Occupation Journalist with:Shreveport JournalThe Dallas Morning NewsProfessor at:Sam Houston State UniversityUniversity of CincinnatiSouthern Methodist University Awards Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting Nominations Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting |
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John Craig Flournoy (born June 26, 1951 in Shreveport, Louisiana, USA) is a journalism professor at Southern Methodist University and a former investigative reporter for The Dallas Morning News, at which his work included coverage of the latter portion of the civil rights movement.
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He has taught since 2003 at SMU, where in 1986, he received a Master of Arts degree in history. He formerly taught courses on computer-assisted reporting, investigative reporting, history of American journalism, and communication law briefly at the University of Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio. From 1997 to 1998, while on leave from The Dallas Morning News, was the Phillip G. Warner Professor of Journalism at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas.
Education
Flournoy obtained his Bachelor of Arts in history with honors from the University of New Orleans in 1975, his master's in history from SMU in 1986, and his Ph.D. in journalism in 2003 from the Douglas Manship School of Mass Communications at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
Career
Prior to his work as The Dallas Morning News, Flournoy worked as a reporter and columnist from January 1977 to December 1978 for the since defunct Shreveport Journal under the editor Stanley R. Tiner. At The Journal Flournoy and Bill Keith investigated the office of Webster Parish Sheriff O. H. Haynes, Jr., and the police department in Springhill for corrupt practices. The reporters alleged that the two departments had covered up cases of prostitution, ticket-fixing, stolen bond money, and narcotics violations. Investigations by chief criminal sheriff's deputy T. C. Bloxom, Jr., and Mayor M. A. Gleason of Springhill uncovered no evidence of wrongdoing. Haynes rose from his hospital bed in Shreveport, where he was undergoing treatment for bronchitis, to deny all allegations. It was noted that The Shreveport Times was, meanwhile, preparing a story on the lower crime rate in Webster Parish compared to other nearby locations. The investigations ultimately cleared Haynes. State Attorney General William J. Guste returned no indictment in the case.
Flournoy's works have appeared in Columbia Journalism Review, Journalism & Mass Communication Educator and The Newspaper Research Journal.
Awards and honors
Flournoy has won more than fifty state and national journalism awards, including:
Family
Flournoy and his wife Nina Flournoy have three daughters. Mrs. Flournoy is a senior lecturer at Southern Methodist University.